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Outbreak of group A streptococcal throat infection: don't forget to ask about food

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2007

G. FALKENHORST*
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology Training (EPIET)
J. BAGDONAITE
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology Training (EPIET)
M. LISBY
Affiliation:
Regional Food Inspection Authority of Eastern Denmark
S. B. MADSEN
Affiliation:
Regional Food Inspection Authority of Eastern Denmark
L. LAMBERTSEN
Affiliation:
Department for Bacteriology, Mycology and Parasitology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark
K. E. P. OLSEN
Affiliation:
Department for Bacteriology, Mycology and Parasitology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark
K. MØLBAK
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology, Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, Denmark
*
*Author for correspondence: G. Falkenhorst, M.D., Department of Epidemiology, Statens Serum Institut, Artillerivej 5, DK-2300 Copenhagen, Denmark. (Email: GFA@ssi.dk)
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Summary

We report a large foodborne outbreak due to group A streptococci (GAS), which caused acute tonsillo-pharyngitis in 200–250 patrons of a company canteen in Copenhagen, Denmark, in June 2006. A retrospective cohort study of canteen users showed that consumption of cold pasta was associated with an increased risk of illness (attack rate 68%, risk ratio 4·1, P<0·0001). Indistinguishable GAS strains (emm89, T-type 3/13/B3264) were cultured from three cases and a cook, who had prepared the pasta. To our knowledge, pasta has previously only twice been incriminated as the source of a GAS outbreak. Only six foodborne GAS outbreaks have been reported in Europe since 1970, four of them in Sweden or Denmark. This geographical clustering suggests that foodborne GAS outbreaks are probably under-recognized elsewhere.

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © 2007 Cambridge University Press

INTRODUCTION

Group A streptococcus (GAS), also called Streptococcus pyogenes, is the most frequent bacterial cause of acute tonsillo-pharyngitis (‘sore throat’), primarily in school-aged children, although all age groups can be affected. Rare but severe post-infectious complications are acute rheumatic fever and glomerulonephritis [Reference Bisno, Mandell, Bennett and Dolin1]. Over 120 serotypes of GAS can be identified based on variations in M- and T-proteins on the cell surface [Reference Johnson2]. Transmission is usually from person-to-person by respiratory droplets or by skin contact. Foodborne transmission of GAS and other haemolytic streptococci through raw milk, often originating from cows with streptococcal mastitis, used to be common up to the 1940s [Reference Dublin3, Reference Evans4], but has declined sharply since the introduction of pasteurization. Nowadays, foodborne GAS outbreaks reported from industrialized countries are caused by contamination of food items during the final preparation. Food handlers identified as the source of contamination had sore throat, infected skin lesions on their hands/arms, or were asymptomatic carriers [Reference Levy, Johnson and Kraa5, Reference Katzenell, Shemer and Bar-Dayan6]. Most outbreaks occurred in summer, suggesting multiplication of GAS in insufficiently refrigerated foods. We report here a large foodborne GAS outbreak, which affected 200–250 patrons of a canteen in Denmark in summer 2006. The vehicle of transmission was probably cold pasta, contaminated by a cook who was probably an asymptomatic carrier.

METHODS

Outbreak setting

On 30 June 2006, the regional food inspection authority for Copenhagen area was contacted by the management of a company located in a large office building. The management reported that many employees had fallen ill with acute sore throat over the previous 2 days and that some had had a positive GAS rapid test by their general practitioner. Simultaneously, several employees of other companies in the same building reported acute sore throat. The only apparent common exposure to employees of these different companies was eating in the only canteen of the building. We investigated the outbreak in order to test the hypothesis that consumption of canteen food was a risk factor and to determine if any control measures were necessary.

Epidemiological investigation

All companies having offices in the building were telephoned in order to determine the magnitude of the outbreak and possible common exposures. Following explorative interviews with several ill people, we conducted two retrospective cohort studies among the employees of the two largest companies. The aim of the first study was to test the hypothesis that illness was associated with eating in the canteen. We e-mailed a questionnaire to all employees with questions about type, onset time and duration of symptoms, sick leave taken, and results of diagnostic tests for GAS. We asked if they had eaten in the canteen on the days preceding the outbreak and what type of meal they had eaten (hot meat meal, hot vegetarian meal, cold board, salad bar). Based on these results, we sent a second questionnaire listing specific food items to canteen users to identify if any specific item was associated with an increased risk of illness.

We defined a ‘primary case’ as an employee of either of the two companies who reported onset of acute sore throat between 27 June noon and 30 June 2006. Questionnaire data were entered using EpiData version 3.1 [Reference Lauritsen and Bruus7] and statistical analysis was performed with stata version 8.0 [8].

Microbiological and environmental investigation

The canteen was inspected and details of food preparation obtained. Food samples and swabs from kitchen utensils and surfaces were cultured for haemolytic streptococci. We interviewed all members of the canteen staff about preceding sore throat or skin infections, inspected their hands and forearms and took throat swabs from all and wound swabs where applicable. Throat swabs were also taken from ill office employees on a voluntary basis on 12 July.

All swabs were cultured on 5% horse-blood agar and colonies showing β-haemolysis were investigated for the presence of GAS by standard methods. GAS isolates were further characterized by determination of T-type using antisera from Sevapharma (Prague, Czech Republic), sequencing of the emm gene coding for M-protein [Reference Beall, Facklam and Thompson9] and by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) using SmaI. Emm sequences were compared with the reference ‘Streptococcus pyogenes emm sequence database’ at the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [10].

Literature search

We aimed to identify reports of foodborne GAS outbreaks in the European Union. We searched PubMed by using various combinations of the terms ‘outbreak’, ‘epidemic’, ‘food*’, ‘streptococ*’, ‘tonsil*’, ‘pharyn*’. Additional reports, including those written in other European Union languages were retrieved from the references of these articles.

RESULTS

Epidemiological findings

About 1000 people worked in 16 different companies in the building. Telephone interviews with all companies showed that at least 140 persons, employed by 13 different companies, had become ill with acute sore throat in the week starting 26 June 2006. Many employees of all companies usually eat lunch at the canteen. No other shared exposures were reported. For logistical reasons, we restricted our further epidemiological investigation to two large companies with about 540 and 100 employees, respectively.

In our first study, we sent the questionnaire to all 640 employees, of whom 191 (30%) replied. Sixty-four (34%) reported acute sore throat. Frequently reported concomitant symptoms were tiredness (81%), headache (75%) and fever (72%). Forty-three cases (67%) reported at least one gastrointestinal symptom (nausea, abdominal pain, vomiting or diarrhoea), 16 (25%) had diarrhoea and seven (11%) vomiting. Fifteen persons reported a positive GAS rapid test performed by their general practitioner. The median duration of illness was 4 days (range 1–10) and 40 persons took sick leave for a median of 2 days (range 1–10), totalling 86 sick days. Only six secondary cases among household members were reported.

Based on the shape of the epidemic curve (Fig.), we decided to calculate attack rates (AR) and risk ratios (RR) for specific exposures by comparing the 42 ‘primary cases’ (symptom onset between 27 June noon and 30 June) with people who were not ill or became ill after 30 June (Table 1). The AR in people who had eaten in the canteen on 26 or 27 June was 33% (32%), compared to 4% (6%) in those who had not. The RR was 8·0 (5·2), P<0·001. Of all primary cases 95% (93%) reported eating in the canteen on 26 or 27 June.

Fig. Foodborne outbreak of group A streptococcal (GAS) sore throat, Copenhagen, 2006, persons with known date of symptom onset. a=00:01–12:00 hours; p=12:01–24:00 hours.

Table 1. Risk of illness among employees by different categories of exposure to canteen food

Totals do not add up to the same numbers in each line due to missing data.

AR, Attack rate; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval.

* Cases=people who had onset of acute sore throat between 27 June noon and 30 June 2006, referred to as ‘primary cases’ in the text. Two of 42 primary cases did not provide any information about canteen use.

Eating from the salad bar or the hot vegetarian dish on either day was associated with similarly increased risk of illness (RR 2·0–2·6). The proportion of exposed cases was 91% (89%) for salad bar on 26 (27) June, and 29% for the vegetarian dish on either day. Of the ten cases who reported eating the vegetarian warm dish on either day, nine also reported eating from the salad bar.

In the second analytical study, we asked the 122 patrons who had eaten in the canteen on 26 or 27 June about consumption of 13 specific food items. Sixty-four (52%) responded (Table 2). The AR and RR were highest for those who ate cold pasta from the salad bar (AR 68%, RR 4·1, 95% CI 1·9–8·8, P<0·0001), and 76% of primary cases reported eating this item. In a multivariate logistic regression, it was the only exposure significantly associated with illness (odds ratio 8·9, P=0·001).

Table 2. Food specific attack rates among employees eating in the canteen on 26 or 27 June 2007

Only one or no cases occurred among people who reported eating marinated herring, liver paté or trout salad.

AR, Attack rate; RR, risk ratio; CI, confidence interval.

Microbiological and environmental findings

The canteen was inspected on 4 July. It operated as a self-service buffet and was frequented by several hundred clients per day. Most dishes were prepared in the adjacent kitchen. The general hygiene standards were good, but the refrigeration capacity appeared insufficient. Food items inside the refrigerators including boiled pasta were stored in tightly packed large plastic containers, thereby delaying cool-down. Left-over food from before the outbreak was not available. Nine swabs from kitchen utensils and surfaces and 19 samples of currently served food including raw milk cheese were culture-negative for haemolytic streptococci.

None of the 15 staff members working in the canteen and kitchen reported sore throat or skin lesions before the outbreak. One of the cooks (cook A) had a purulent wound on his left thumb, resulting from a burn wound which he claimed to have sustained on 30 June, 3 days after the start of the outbreak. GAS were cultured from swabs of his wound and his throat. None of the other staff members had visible skin lesions on their hands or forearms, and their throat swabs were negative for haemolytic streptococci.

Cook A reported that in the week beginning 26 June he had boiled pasta for the salad bar. He admitted that before wounding his thumb, he used to stir the pasta with his bare hands when flushing it in a sink with cold water after boiling. He was not involved in the preparation of other foodstuffs for the salad bar.

Of the throat swabs taken from 29 cases on 12 July, five were positive for GAS, and one each for group C and group G streptococci. Three of these GAS isolates and those from cook A's throat and wound were indistinguishable. They were emm89 (corresponding to M-type 89), T-type 3/13/B3264 and showed identical PFGE patterns. The other two GAS isolates were of two distinct types (emm118, T-type 3/13/B3264 and emm22, T-type 12, respectively) and showed different PFGE patterns. All isolates were fully sensitive to penicillin.

DISCUSSION

Our results suggest that this outbreak was caused by GAS-contaminated cold pasta served in the canteen of a large office building in Copenhagen. Our first cohort study showed that almost all primary cases (95%) had eaten in the canteen. Eating from the salad bar or consuming the hot vegetarian dish were associated with a similarly increased risk of illness, the former explaining a larger proportion of cases (~90%). In a second cohort study, where we asked canteen users about consumption of particular foodstuffs from the salad bar, cold pasta was the only food item significantly associated with illness.

The isolation of indistinguishable GAS strains from three outbreak cases and from cook A supports the hypothesis that cold pasta was the outbreak vehicle. Although speculative, a plausible sequence of events was as follows: On Monday morning, 26 June, cook A – either being an asymptomatic GAS carrier or already having an infected hand wound – contaminated the pasta when stirring it with his bare hands after boiling. A too large bulk of still warm pasta was placed in the refrigerator, which delayed cool-down and provided an opportunity for GAS to multiply. GAS counts may still have been uncritical by lunchtime on 26 June. It seems probable that a portion of the boiled pasta was kept overnight and served at the salad bar on 27 June, by which time GAS counts were high enough to cause infection. Further bacterial growth may have occurred in the salad bar itself, because its chilling capacity was insufficient at high ambient temperature.

It was impossible to impute the probable day of transmission statistically, because most cases had eaten in the canteen on both 26 and 27 June. Assuming transmission on 27 June, we observed a median incubation period of 33 h (Fig.), which is compatible with reported mean incubation periods for foodborne GAS infection of 32–52 h (range 6–72 h) [Reference Levy, Johnson and Kraa5]. The maximum incubation period was difficult to define because cases with late onset may have been due to secondary transmission.

Pasta has to our knowledge only twice previously been reported as the vehicle of a GAS outbreak [Reference Jespersen, Rasmussen and Steensberg11, Reference Farley12], while the most frequently incriminated vehicles are salads or sandwiches with hard-boiled eggs [5]. Both eggs and pasta appear an excellent sterile ‘growth medium’ for streptococci if contaminated after boiling. The ability of GAS to grow on pasta at 20°C has been demonstrated experimentally [Reference Farley12].

As the canteen was suspected as the source of the outbreak early on, symptomatic canteen users might have been more likely to return the questionnaire, introducing a selection bias. However, it should not have influenced the observed associations with specific foods, as there had been no rumours about ‘suspicious’ foods. The delay between exposure and the second analytical study was long (18 days), which made it difficult for people to remember what they had eaten. If anything, this may have biased the results towards an underestimation of any statistical association, but not produced a spurious association.

Efforts to determine the magnitude of the outbreak were hampered by the Danish school holidays starting a few days after the start of the outbreak. By the time of our investigation, many of the office employees, including potential cases, had gone on holiday, accounting for the low response rate. Enquiries to the management of all companies in the building revealed 140 cases. Of questionnaire respondents, 34% (64/191) reported acute sore throat, whereas 22% (42/191) met our restrictive case definition of a presumed primary case. In summary, we estimated that 200–250 people (20–25% of the ~1000 employees in the building) became ill. This makes it one of the largest foodborne GAS outbreaks reported in Europe in the last 30 years, and the first to be associated with a workplace canteen.

Table 3. Reported foodborne outbreaks of group A streptococcal (GAS) tonsillo-pharyngitis in Europe, 1970–2006

* Median (range) in hours.

Time of transmission uncertain, see Discussion.

Present study.

The proportion of GAS-positive cultures from throat swabs of cases was low (5/29), probably due to the long delay of 16 days between infection and swabbing. Moreover, half the cases with negative swabs had received penicillin treatment. It is not surprising that apart from the suspected outbreak strain, we found four other streptococcus strains, because streptococcal tonsillitis/pharyngitis and asymptomatic carriage are common conditions. Among Danes aged 15–44 years without a sore throat, 2·3% were carriers of GAS and 3·9% of group C or G streptococci in 1983 [Reference Hoffmann13]. We are not aware of any more recent carriage studies in adults.

Food handlers with acute sore throat or infected skin lesions, and also asymptomatic carriers have been reported as the source of foodborne GAS outbreaks [Reference Levy, Johnson and Kraa5, Reference Katzenell, Shemer and Bar-Dayan6]. Banning food handlers with open hand wounds from work will prevent some outbreaks of GAS – and staphylococcal food poisoning. However, strict adherence to time-temperature regulations for storage of prepared foods is equally important.

We found six publications of foodborne GAS outbreaks in the European Union since 1970 (Table 3) [Reference Jespersen, Rasmussen and Steensberg11, Reference Gallo14Reference Asteberg18]. One outbreak each was reported from Italy and Greece, three outbreaks occurred in the southern part of Sweden and two (including the present one) in the neighbouring larger Copenhagen area in Denmark. There seems to be a clustering in the south of Scandinavia that is difficult to explain. Are foodborne GAS outbreaks not occurring in most other European countries – or are they not detected? Or are they detected, but not reported?

Foodborne transmission of GAS will only be recognized if actively looked for. Outbreaks of sore throat in families or other groups of people with close personal contact may not be perceived as foodborne. They may not be reported to an appropriate authority, or are missed because an analytical epidemiological study with few cases may lack the power to distinguish between foodborne and person-to-person transmission. In addition, health personnel may not know that GAS can be transmitted by food [Reference Claesson15, Reference Asteberg18], a problem which also delayed the investigation of the present outbreak. It is even more difficult to estimate the contribution of foodborne transmission to sporadic GAS cases. Thus, the true public health burden of foodborne GAS transmission is unknown and probably underestimated.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank the employees and the management of the affected companies for supporting our investigations. We thank Kirsten Burmeister of the Neisseria and Streptococcus Reference Laboratory and the staff of the Bacterial Typing Laboratory at Statens Serum Institut for their skilled technical assistance in typing the GAS isolates.

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

References

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Figure 0

Fig. Foodborne outbreak of group A streptococcal (GAS) sore throat, Copenhagen, 2006, persons with known date of symptom onset. a=00:01–12:00 hours; p=12:01–24:00 hours.

Figure 1

Table 1. Risk of illness among employees by different categories of exposure to canteen food

Figure 2

Table 2. Food specific attack rates among employees eating in the canteen on 26 or 27 June 2007

Figure 3

Table 3. Reported foodborne outbreaks of group A streptococcal (GAS) tonsillo-pharyngitis in Europe, 1970–2006